HISTORY


At one time the land that is now Shrewsbury
Borough was part of one large area called Shrewsbury Township.
In 1797, Baltzer (Balthaser) Faust began to develop the village by laying out
lots on both sides of Joppa Road
(later the York-Baltimore Turnpike and now Main Street). The early settlers were
mostly German and
the town was called Strassburg, which means "the town by the street or
road." By 1830 there was enough
of an influx of English people to reinstate "Shrewsbury" as the
official name. On August 9, 1834,
the Borough of Shrewsbury was incorporated by an
Act of the General Assembly.
The area delineated was approximately one mile long and one-half mile wide,
stretching lengthwise along
the turnpike, with the borough center located at the crossroads. Shrewsbury was
honored on March 22, 1984,
when the Historic District was entered on the National Register of Historic
Places,
which is kept by the Untied States Department of the Interior as the official
list of the nation's
cultural resources worth of preservation and includes properties significant in
architecture,
American history, archaeology, culture and those embodying the precious heritage
of the United State of America.

Point and click to our
other pages:
Agenda and Minutes
Click on our logo to go back to the front page.
11/29/2002